Aims: The aim of this study was to assess the prognostic value of myocardial viability recognized as a contractile response to vasodilator stimulation in patients with left ventricular dysfunction in a large scale, prospective, multicentre, observational study.
Methods And Results: Three hundred and seven patients (mean age 60 +/- 10 years) with angiographically proven coronary artery disease, previous (>3 months) myocardial infarction and severe left ventricular dysfunction (ejection fraction <35%; mean ejection fraction: 28 +/- 7%) were enrolled in the study. Each patient underwent low dose dipyridamole echo (0.
Resting and stress echocardiography is a 'one-stop shop', which enables a wide range of information to be collected on resting function, myocardial viability, and induced ischaemia, all of which are useful for prognostic stratification. Large scale, multicentre, prospectively collected data show the prognostic failure of resting function and inducible ischaemia, both independently and combined, which are especially effective in predicting cardiac death. The GISSI data show that the increment of risk as a result of reduction in ventricular function has a hyperbolic trend, with a relatively moderate increase in mortality for ejection fraction values between 50 and 30%, but with marked increases below 30%.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: After an acute myocardial infarction (AMI), stunned myocardium may cause a reversible left ventricular dysfunction. Dipyridamole echocardiography (0.56 mg*kg-1 over 4' e 0.
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